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Are the War and Globalization Really Connected?
===============================================

By Mark Engler

Foreign Policy in Focus:
http://www.fpif.org/papers/0410warglob.html.

(Note: A version of this article was presented at the
2004 Life After Capitalism conference in August.  That
talk, which takes up the same questions about Iraq but
places them in a larger discussion about the state of
the global economy, is available at:
http://www.democracyuprising.com/articles/2004/LACtalk.php)

To be radical, in the oldest sense of the word, is to
go to the root. One strength of truly progressive
analysis is that it places what appear to be isolated
events in a larger context. It seeks to make
connections between seemingly disparate political
issues by revealing underlying ideological frameworks.

And so it has been a central task, in the post 9-11
era, for activists to demonstrate how  arethe war against
terror and the drive for corporate globalization
one and the same--how peace and global justice
movements share vital common ground. That these two
issues are connected, in a fundamental way, is an
article of faith on the political left, reinforced by
the fact that many participants in globalization
protests have also mobilized against the Bush
administration's militarism.

All such articles of faith deserve a bit of critical
skepticism, so I would like to offer a constructive
challenge. Many of the arguments wedding the war in
Iraq with a strategy for neoliberal expansion are not
readily convincing. They risk reading causality into
tangential relationships. And, in their drive to
connect, they overlook important disjunctures between
the Bush administration's foreign policy and the policy
preferred by many business elites. Activists have good
reason to look again at the neoconservative hawks now
in power and to consider whether they have outdone the
corporate globalists of earlier years or whether they
have betrayed them.

Arguing for a Link

Let's start by examining some of the strongest
arguments for the link between the war on terror and
corporate globalization. First, the White House has
been eager to make big business a partner in the
execution of the Iraq War and the subsequent
occupation. This has been most prominently evidenced by
the high-priced reconstruction contracts snatched up by
well-connected companies like Halliburton and Bechtel.

Second, the president has advanced a neoliberal agenda
domestically by cutting taxes for the wealthy and
further eroding social safety nets. His administration
has employed the rhetoric of the war on terror to
attack unions--most notably in the summer of 2002, when
it threatened to intervene for "national security"
purposes in a West Coast dock workers strike. Activists
are also correct to note that the war abroad has been
used to suppress dissent at home. Of the $87 billion
passed by Congress last October for the occupation of
Iraq, $8.5 million went for policing the protests in
Miami opposing the Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA). Moreover conservatives attack both antiwar and
globalization protesters as unpatriotic and helpful to
terrorists.

Finally, activists have seen a connection between war
and corporate globalization in the privatization of
Iraq's economy. Political commentators Naomi Klein and
Antonia Juhasz, among others, have detailed how the
occupation of Iraq allowed the U.S. governing authority
to restructure the country's economy based on strict
neoliberal principles. Following what The Economist
magazine called a "wish-list that foreign investors and
donor agencies dream of for developing markets,"
Washington instituted measures providing for the
privatization of 200 Iraqi state firms, for 100%
foreign ownership in Iraqi companies outside the oil
production and refinement sectors, for full
repatriation of profits, and for a 15% cap on corporate
taxes.

Juhasz explains in a July 2004 article for Foreign
Policy in Focus entitled "The Hand-Over that Wasn't"
that the executive orders issued by U.S. administrator
Paul Bremer will be difficult to overturn, even though
a transfer of sovereignty has officially taken place.
Not only is the interim government prohibited " from
taking 'any actions affecting Iraq's destiny' beyond
the election of an Iraqi government," but, Juhasz
writes, the occupiers have stacked "every Ministry with
U.S.-appointed authorities with five-year terms--well
into the period of the new, elected government."

How Deep a Connection?

Although these attempts to link neoconservative
militarism and corporate globalization have merit, each
of them has important weaknesses. First, consider war
profiteering. Although corporations do exhibit
shameless opportunism in seizing business opportunities
created by U.S. military action, this does not connect
war and globalization in a deep way. As Robert Jensen
recently argued in his critique of Fahrenheit 9/11,
Michael Moore's over-reliance on this argument both
leads to a weak explanation of the causes of war and
overlooks Democratic Party patronage of the military-
industrial complex:

"A family member of a soldier who died asks, 'for
what?' and Moore cuts to the subject of war
profiteering.... [ D]oes Moore really want us to
believe that a major war was launched so that
Halliburton and other companies could increase its
profits for a few years? Yes, war profiteering happens,
but it is not the reason nations go to war. This kind
of distorted analysis helps keep viewers' attention
focused on the Bush administration... not the routine
way in which corporate America makes money off the
misnamed Department of Defense, no matter who is in the
White House."

A focus on profiteering risks ignoring the stated
neoconservative goal of reinforcing U.S. hegemony in
the Middle East and beyond, something far more
significant than short-term kickbacks to corporate
sponsors. Also, it assumes that the objectives of
specific businesses like Halliburton and U.S. arms
contractors accurately reflect the general interests of
all multinational corporations, an idea that deserves
scrutiny.

As for the "war at home," there is no question that the
Bush administration has used the specter of terrorism
to push a regressive domestic agenda. However, this can
also be considered opportunistic behavior rather than
evidence of a systematic relationship between war and
globalization. Republican realists who opposed the
invasion of Iraq have generally promoted tax cuts and
the Patriot Act, while many stalwart globalizers from
the Clinton administration have fought these domestic
measures. There is little reason to think that war in
Iraq was a necessary condition for advancing Bush's
domestic neoliberalism, even if it provided politically
convenient cover for many actions.

Does Capital Gain?

The forced privatization of Iraq's economy provides the
most vivid link between war and neoliberalism. Yet to
determine whether this restructuring is representative
of a larger trend--of a new phase of corporate
globalization in which the "freeing" of markets will be
more militaristically regulated--we must look at the
wider state of trade and development policy under
George W. Bush. Activists often point to the president
himself as a bridge between globalization and
militarism, as someone who vocally supports both free
trade and preemptive war. However, the Bush
administration's actions in the trade arena have often
contradicted its rhetoric, distinguishing it from its
globalist predecessors.

Globalization has always been a vague term, employed
for many different purposes. Confusion over the use of
the word has often muddled analysis of the state of the
global economy. In the 1990s, "corporate globalization"
most frequently referred to a "rules-based"
international order, designed for the benefit of
multinational corporations and regulated primarily by a
set of multilateral financial institutions.

Particularly since September 11, 2001, Bush's
globalization policy has been quite different from what
characterized the Clinton years. As in its military
actions, the current administration has shown a
penchant for go-it-alone nationalism in its economic
negotiations. This has led to a type of bare-knuckles
promotion of U.S. interests distinct from the
multilateralist model of global capitalism advanced in
the 1990s. As a result of this shift, as well as a
concurrent global economic downturn, trade talks in
recent years have been combative, tense, and often
unproductive.

Actually, much of the business elite would prefer
Clinton's multilateralist globalization to Bush's
imperial version. Prior to the war, many corporate
leaders feared that the invasion of Iraq would be bad
for business. Writing from the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland, in February 2003, Newsday reporter
Laurie Garrett observed that " The rich--whether they
are French or Chinese or just about anybody--are livid
about the Iraq crisis primarily because they believe it
will sink their financial fortunes." Noted Garrett,
"When Colin Powell gave the speech of his life, trying
to win over the non-American delegates, the sharpest
attack on his comments came not from Amnesty
International or some Islamic representative--it came
from the head of the largest bank in the Netherlands !"

And corporate worries persisted as the war effort went
forward. After the invasion had begun, the Washington
Post reported on March 23, 2003, that: "Discord over
the Iraq War is putting uncomfortable strains on
economic links between the United States and Europe, a
relationship that many view as a cornerstone of global
prosperity. Guardians of transatlantic harmony are
scrambling to keep the diplomatic rift from poisoning
economic ties." The article continued, "the animosity
that has flared of late appears almost certain to seep
into transatlantic trade and investment issues."

Of greatest concern in the Washington Post article was
"that lingering acrimony among top policymakers will
spark tit-for-tat trade wars, and wreck the U.S.-
European cooperation needed to strike a worldwide trade
accord that could help spur global growth." A 2002-03
dispute over U.S. steel tariffs provides a prime
illustration of just such a trade war. President Bush's
March 2002 decision to institute protective tariffs
against foreign steel sparked harsh rebukes and an
immediate complaint to the World Trade Organization
(WTO) by the European Union, Brazil, China, Japan,
Korea, New Zealand, Norway, and Switzerland. The WTO
ultimately ruled against the tariffs in November 2003.

Similarly, nationalist resistance on the part of the
United States to opening its markets played a major
role in deadlocking talks at last September's WTO
ministerial in Cancún, Mexico. Since then, the
institution has floundered. The same U.S. intransigence
appeared again at November's FTAA ministerial in Miami,
derailing the once-seemingly inevitable trade pact and
forcing Washington to pursue much smaller, bilateral
agreements with individual nations.

One can argue that the Bush administration's economic
nationalism has effectively defended U.S. interests,
but few will contend that it has bolstered the
international financial institutions that globalization
protesters in the past identified as leading evils. And
not many European corporations or other multinational
enterprises based outside the United States--previously
stalwart partners in the global expansion of corporate
power--will praise current American economic policy.

McDonald's and McDonnell Douglas

Returning to the case of Iraq, there is no question
that the U.S. occupying authority has opportunistically
used its power to impose "free market" reforms on
Iraq's economy. But this alone is not reason to assume
that Bush's militarism represents the new face of
globalization. In fact, this assumption has produced
some wobbly analysis. For example, Arundhati Roy has
argued that it was international grassroots pressure
against the advance of corporate globalization that
forced those in power to adopt a more militaristic
posture. In a January 2003 address to the World Social
Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, Roy argued: "We may not
have stopped [empire] in its tracks--yet--but we have
stripped it down. We have made it drop its mask. We
have forced it into the open. It now stands before us
on the world's stage in all its brutish, iniquitous
nakedness."

There are several problems with this assertion. First,
it closely equates empire and corporate globalization
with U.S. nationalist ambitions, something quite
different from the usual global justice interpretation
of a dominant corporate empire that operates largely
outside the power of a diminished nation-state. Roy's
analysis leaves little room for businesspeople who
would argue that Bush's economic nationalism and
warmongering make for bad capitalism and that global
corporations would be better off with a Clinton- or
Kerry-style multilateralist in office. It also
contradicts the viewpoint that Iraq was an elective
war, waged in pursuit of an extreme neoconservative
ideological vision of U.S. dominance that is out of
step not just with leftists but with the approach
favored by most business and foreign policy elites. And
Roy's assertion can lead one to overlook the fact that
the more subtle mechanisms of corporate globalization--
i.e., conditions imposed by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World Bank--are still functioning
quietly and effectively, constraining the potentially
autonomous economic policy of countries like Brazil,
for example.

If anything, social movement pressure is probably
forcing empire back into its closet. In recent months,
President Bush has scrambled to internationalize the
occupation of Iraq and to temper his nationalism in
trade talks, bringing institutions like the UN and IMF
back onto center stage in his foreign policy. If John
Kerry is elected in November, he will no doubt push
even further in a multilateralist direction in both
arenas, a move that will comfort many businesspeople.

In his 1999 book The Lexus and the Olive Tree, New York
Times columnist Thomas Friedman wrote: "The hidden hand
of the market will never work without a hidden fist....
McDonald's cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas,
the designer of the U.S. Air Force F-15. And the hidden
fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley's
technologies to flourish is called the U.S. Army, Air
Force, Navy and Marine Corps."

Activists have frequently quoted this view, coming from
a mainstream observer, as vindication of their
arguments linking militarism and corporate expansion.
However, it is important to note that Friedman was
writing about the Clinton years, an era in which a
multilateral consensus around a post-Cold War U.S.
military dominance was being carefully cultivated. The
Bush administration's post-Sept. 11 decision to take
the fist out of hiding and wield it in a widely
unpopular war significantly shook the international
order that for years had provided a climate of business
stability. In doing so, President Bush has arguably
illustrated the manner in which McDonald's and
McDonnell Douglas's interests collide. Indeed, by
privileging specific sectors of the U.S. economy such
as energy companies and arms contractors, the White
House has rattled the global marketplace in which U.S.
financial capital and consumer-based industries must
operate.

Competing Globalizations

Part of the confusion surrounding the analysis of Iraq
comes from sloppy use of the term "globalization."
Dissenters to the neoliberal order have long argued
that they are not opposed to globalization, but are
advocates of a very different type of globalization
than that favored by corporate free traders or IMF
economists; namely, a globalization of justice and
solidarity. Appreciating this lesson about the
diversity of globalizations also requires recognizing
that the spectrum of national and business interests
are not entirely united in their vision of an ideal
world order. Diverse nations and corporations often
present competing interests. Clinton's corporate
version of globalization and Bush's imperial one are
less a continuous progression in foreign policy than
they are dissonant visions of international economics.
The current administration's militarism is not linked
to Clinton's rules-based economic order; rather it
represents a departure from it that may soon be
reversed.

In this case, it may be most useful to move beyond the
concept of globalization altogether and look for a
deeper level of connection. Ultimately, there is an
ongoing need to develop coherent theories of how the
struggle to control limited oil reserves will shape the
future of capitalist economics. (The war in Iraq is
related to this, not because it is a bid to seize
ownership of Iraq's oil fields, but because it is
another step in Washington's protracted efforts to
manipulate and control Middle Eastern politics.) It is
also important to consider how war plays into the boom-
and-bust business cycle that has long affected both the
U.S. and global economies.

To refocus on these questions can open a new discussion
about war and the global economy, one not commonly
featured in current antiwar critiques. Combating the
crass corporate favoritism and neoconservative
aggression of the Bush administration is a worthy goal
in its own right. But because there are many who will
oppose George Bush while eagerly anticipating a return
to the high times of an earlier neoliberalism, the
struggle to build an alternative globalization will
continue for many Novembers to come.

---------------------------------------------
Mark Engler, a writer based in New York, is a
commentator for Foreign Policy in Focus. He can be
reached at http://www.DemocracyUprising.com. Research
assistance for this article was provided by Jason Rowe.

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directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
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always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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